Over the past 5 years the Bargersville Police Department have traded the majority of their patrol vehicles to Teslas. Bargersville Police say their fleet of 13 Teslas is saving the town $US80,000 a year.
“Money, it’s all about the money” Bargersville Police Chief Todd Bertram told WRTV. “Yeah it was a risk in the very beginning, but it’s proven now.
“It’s working, it saves a lot of money and I have to think there’s a lot of agencies in the country that are like mine that it would work for.”
NEWS: Bargersville’s fleet of 13 @Tesla police cars saves taxpayers about $80,000 a year in fuel costs compared to gas-powered police vehicles.
The town is saving enough on fuel to pay for two additional officers. “We just traded our first car in this year and we got $17,500 for… pic.twitter.com/niWqI9RUr6
— Sawyer Merritt (@SawyerMerritt) May 21, 2024
Bertram says the town used the savings to hire two new officers. One of the new officers, Cody St. John, says he much prefers the Tesla to the diesel option.
“It took a little getting used to, but now if I have to get a tire replaced or something [on the Tesla] and I’m in a gas [loan] car again, I can’t wait to get my car back.”
The Bargersville Police Department still has 6 diesel cars in its fleet. Bertram says the diesels burn through about $US2,900 a month in fuel. Meanwhile the monthly electricity bill to keep the 13 Teslas charged comes to just $US600. On a per vehicle basis that’s $483 per month for the ICE vehicle compared to just $46 for the Tesla – a tenfold reduction in fuel costs.
In a post on X, EV journalist Sawyer Merritt says switching their entire US police fleet to electric could save $US1.6 billion per year in fuel savings alone.
According to my calculations, switching all police cars in the U.S. to all-electric police cars could save taxpayers over $1.6 billion annually just in fuel savings alone.
The South Pasadena police department made their entire fleet Model Ys. It’s saving them a lot. https://t.co/aYSshhSzxa
— Sawyer Merritt (@SawyerMerritt) May 21, 2024
Daniel Bleakley is a clean technology researcher and advocate with a background in engineering and business. He has a strong interest in electric vehicles, renewable energy, manufacturing and public policy.